Author: Michael Dougherty

Westminster College students discussed political activism and the outdoors with guest speaker Bill Barron at the Climate Solutions event held in Malouf 201, on Wednesday. Barron, a veteran ski patroller and advocate for bi-partisan action on climate change, talked with students about his concerns for the environment and his experience running for office. Barron said he has always been passionate a...

Associate Professor of Philosophy Dr. Kara Barnett spoke on ecofeminism and the importance of recognizing connections between environment and gender at a Taboo Talk Wednesday. Ecofeminism is a philosophical and political movement that combines environmental concerns with feminist ones, regarding both as resulting from male domination of society, according to Barnett. “Throughout the history of phi...

During the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association’s Collegiate National Championships in Lake Placid, N.Y., Westminster College’s snowboard team raced in five events: Giant slalom, slalom, boardercross, rail jam and slope. But because the team usually competes in rail jams and slopestyle, the new events left some of the riders feeling slightly out of place, said Cal Aamodt, who films the snowboard tea...

ASW Senate passed a resolution at its meeting Feb. 26 to propose advanced wages for students working on-campus jobs — but it could be an uphill battle to actually make that happen. Students working on campus at Westminster College currently make the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. That’s $2.25 more than the state individual poverty wage of $5 an hour but $4.23 less than the individual livin...

It could cost you only $8 to meet your new best friend. Tinker’s Cat Cafe, located on 302 E. 900 South, opened last November and is Salt Lake City’s first ever cat cafe, where customers can purchase coffee and drinks and then hang out with cats. Cat cafes serve a dual purpose: They allow people to spend time with cats and offer a friendly environment for adoption. “I saw opening a cat cafe as a wi...

For many students at Westminster College, rock climbing is a way to relieve stress and have fun. But for Cole Cooper, a junior political science major who was diagnosed with idiopathic scoliosis at age 7, it has also become a way for him to overcome the problems with his back and spine. Scoliosis — an abnormal curvature of the spine — affects 2 to 3 percent of the population, or an estimated six t...